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Franz Xaver Reimspieß, born in 1900 in Wiener Neustadt, joined the design office on the twenty-fourth of September 1934. In 1915 he began his training as an engineering draughtsman with Austro Daimler. At the end of the 1920s, after completing his engineering studies, he designed the Daimler armoured car.
Franz Xaver Reimspieß was remarkable for his precise work and his wealth of ideas. In 1934 he developed the air-cooled opposed four-cylinder engine for the Volkswagen basing his design on Kales’s opposed four-cylinder engine for the NSU prototype. For the Auto Union P racing car Reimspieß designed new brakes and altered the rear axel to shaft suspension.
During the war Reimspieß was chief designer at the tank development centre within the Nibelungen plant at St Valentin. Thus the plans for the German ‘Tiger’ tank originated from Reimspieß.
After the war he worked in Steyr. Then at Porsche he was in charge of undercarriage design, a position which he held until his retirement in 1966.
His most well-known invention had however little to do with technology. Reimspieß was the designer of the Volkswagen logo. For this idea he received a one-off payment of one hundred Reichmarks.
At Porsche Reimspieß patented around ten inventions for the independent wheel-suspension system and for engines. His most famous patent applications were related to his inventions for the Volkswagen engine.
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